Tuesday, March 15, 2022

Mary Whitney Phelps, Verizon Fios, Twitter, More: Tuesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 15, 2022

Mary Whitney Phelps, Verizon Fios, Twitter, More: Tuesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 15, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

KSMU: Antique letters and memoir, clinched at auction, reveal heroine’s determination after the Battle of Wilson’s Creek. “Mary Whitney Phelps, who was born in 1812 and who died in 1878, is one of Missouri’s Union female heroes of the Civil War, according to the Springfield-Greene County Library District. Rather than flee with other prominent Unionists after the Battle of Wilson’s Creek, she stayed behind in Springfield to oversee General Nathaniel Lyon’s burial and to care for the wounded soldiers left behind during the retreat. Phelps’s letters and memoir are available for public viewing through the library district’s digital collection.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

The Verge: Verizon makes Fios free for low-income customers through federal program. “Verizon is introducing a new discount to its Fios Forward plans, which should let low-income customers get fiber internet for free when combined with discounts through the federal Affordable Connectivity Program. The free tier, which is normally $40 a month, includes 300Mbps speeds as well as a $10 discount on a Verizon Unlimited Wireless plan.”

9to5 Mac: Twitter no longer lets users access the chronological timeline by default [U: Rolled Back]. “Following multiple complaints, Twitter has decided to roll back the update. According to the company, the ‘Latest Tweets’ tab has been removed from the iPhone app and users will get the old Home tab back with the option to show the latest tweets at the top in chronological order.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Washington Post: Twitter is looking for younger users. It’s turning to the tech world’s teen savant to help find them.. “Teenagers have flocked to TikTok in recent years, abandoning apps like Facebook and Instagram. Twitter is stuck somewhere in the middle. Despite its large cultural relevance, Twitter has repeatedly failed to gain mass adoption, and its forays into new formats like short-form video and live-streaming have flopped. But cultivating a young, hyper-engaged user base could be a key step toward becoming a platform as influential as its power users believe it to be. To lead these efforts, Twitter has tapped Michael Sayman.”

National Library of New Zealand: Living history while documenting it . “…after the 2011 Christchurch earthquake the teams within the Library, being mostly based in Wellington, were able to come together quickly to start documenting the impact of this earthquake on the city of Christchurch, and its communities. More recently, we have found ourselves documenting events while also personally experiencing them, the COVID-19 pandemic being one such example. Another example is the recent 2022 Wellington protests, where we found our building to be within the cordoned-off protest area and witnessed standoffs between police and protestors on our front steps.”

UrduPoint: Digital Archive Being Created To Protect Old Data Of Radio Pakistan: Fawad. “Federal Minister for Information and Broadcasting Chaudhry Fawad Hussain Monday informed the National Assembly’s Standing Committee on Information and Broadcasting that a digital archive would be created in Radio Pakistan to protect and maintain its old data. Old data of Radio Pakistan got wasted due to unavailability of the storage space, he told meeting of the committee chaired by Mian Javed Latif.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Irish Council for Civil Liberties: ICCL sues DPC over failure to act on massive Google data breach. “The Irish Council for Civil Liberties (ICCL) is suing the DPC [Ireland’s Data Protection Commission] for its failure to protect people against the biggest data breach ever recorded: Google’s ‘Real-Time Bidding’ online advertising system. The DPC must be compelled to act now.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

World Health Organization: WHO Global Health Facilities Database: Ensuring access to primary healthcare and UHC. “The COVID-19 pandemic has revealed urgent gaps in countries’ current ability to locate health facilities, impeding progress to provide equitable access to therapeutics, diagnostics, and vaccinations through the ACT-Accelerator and other initiatives. As a standardized and open access repository of health facility information, the database will provide critical insights to deliver primary health care, especially during emergencies. It will also leverage the power of geospatial data to map health facilities in relation to communities and help bridge long-standing inequalities in access and use.”

Tubefilter: New data shows TikTok adoption gaining on YouTube, especially among Gen Z. “YouTube has been the undisputed top dog in the online video industry for a decade and a half, but TikTok is cultivating an astonishing user base of its own. According to new data from eMarketer, TikTok’s market share is advancing at a faster rate than YouTube among Gen Z consumers.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

Christian Science Monitor: From lawsuits to giveaway drives, a push against book bans. “As school boards across the United States increasingly vote to remove books from library shelves and classroom curricula, community members are countering by amplifying awareness of those very books. These grassroots efforts – from free book drives to book clubs to lawsuits – differ in method but share a common mission to keep the world of books open for exploration.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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March 16, 2022 at 03:21AM
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Pro-Russia Propaganda, Onavo Data Mining, January 6, More: Facebook Roundup, March 15, 2022

Pro-Russia Propaganda, Onavo Data Mining, January 6, More: Facebook Roundup, March 15, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

AFP: New Facebook tools target misinformation in user groups. “Facebook on Wednesday began letting groups automatically reject posts identified as containing false information, taking aim at a part of the massive network that has drawn particular concern from misinformation watchdogs. More than 1.8 billion people per month use Facebook Groups, which allow members to gather around topics ranging from parenting to politics.”

Washington Post: Pro-Russia rebels are still using Facebook to recruit fighters, spread propaganda. “A former physician known by his nickname, ‘the Surgeon,’ [Aleksandr] Zaldostanov has been on the U.S. government sanctions list since 2014, amid allegations he helped Russian troops confiscate weapons during the country’s invasion of Crimea. The sanctions block Zaldostanov’s assets and generally prohibit U.S. citizens from ‘dealing’ with him, but on Facebook he maintains a very active account, posting frequent support of Russia since the invasion.”

The Verge: Instagram’s standalone Boomerang and Hyperlapse apps are gone from the App Store and Google Play. “Instagram has removed its standalone Boomerang and Hyperlapse apps from Apple’s App Store and Google Play, as reported by TechCrunch. The removal comes shortly after Instagram’s February 28th announcement that it would stop supporting the IGTV app, and the changes indicate that Instagram is opting to consolidate some of its separate offerings to focus on the main Instagram app.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Mashable: Beloved former Nintendo prez craps all over Facebook and the metaverse. “Reggie Fils-Aimé, the former president and CEO of Nintendo of America, is clearly no fan of Facebook and its recent push into VR with the metaverse. At this year’s South by Southwest (SXSW) in Austin, Texas, Fils-Aimé took the opportunity to completely unload on Mark Zuckerberg’s social media conglomerate, now known as Meta, while speaking with Emily Chang of Bloomberg.”

New York Times: Facebook’s Parent Company Will Make Employees Do Their Own Laundry. “The salad days of Facebook’s lavish employee perks may be coming to an end. Meta, the parent company of Facebook, told employees on Friday that it was cutting back or eliminating free services like laundry and dry cleaning and was pushing back the dinner bell for a free meal from 6 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., according to seven company employees who spoke on the condition of anonymity.”

WIRED: The Infinite Reach of Joel Kaplan, Facebook’s Man in Washington. “In Silicon Valley, Joel Kaplan is regarded as one of Facebook’s most curious enigmas. Hired in 2011 after eight years in the Bush White House, his tenure has coincided with Facebook’s rise to global dominance—and its ascendance to the throne of permanent controversy. Formally, Kaplan’s role is to forecast and manage policy risk. Functionally, his authority is as sprawling as the company’s reach. The 52-year-old has not only assembled one of history’s most prolific lobbies in Washington, where he manages relations across the federal government as well as with state capitals and their increasingly avid attorneys general.”

CNBC: Meta’s Sheryl Sandberg: ‘No two countries run by women would ever go to war’. “Meta Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg has suggested Russia and Ukraine wouldn’t be at war if they were run by women.” Benevolent sexism is just as undesirable as any other kind.

SECURITY & LEGAL

Axios: Exclusive: Lawmakers press Meta on China ad policy. “A bipartisan group of lawmakers is pressing Meta on its policy toward paid advertisements from Chinese state-sponsored media as the war in Ukraine continues and false Russian narratives proliferate, per a letter sent to CEO Mark Zuckerberg Tuesday.”

Reuters: South Africa Regulator Refers Meta to Tribunal Over Dominance. “South Africa’s Competition Commission on Monday said it had referred Facebook and WhatsApp owner Meta Platforms to a tribunal for allegedly abusing its dominant position in the market.”

Daily Dot: ‘Largest real-time surveillance system in existence’: Class-action suit details Facebook’s scope of snooping on users. “New court documents released Wednesday in an antitrust lawsuit show the extent of data mining done by Facebook-owned VPN Onavo—and the company’s knowledge of its capabilities. Onavo was founded in 2010 by Guy Rosen and Roi Tiger and sold to Facebook in 2013. Guy Rosen currently serves as Meta’s (formerly Facebook’s) Head of Integrity.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

News@Northeastern: Donald Trump Was The Exception When It Comes To Benefiting From Facebook Ads. “It’s one of the first studies to show that Facebook ads can have an impact on voter turnout. Most of the research on Facebook ads hasn’t found statistically significant effects. This study did. When the right message is applied to the receptive audience, in areas with ‘high-salience’ elections—where there is greater interest and excitement in the election—then the ads work.”

ProPublica: Using Facebook’s Own Data to Understand the Platform’s Role in Jan. 6. “Computational journalist Jeff Kao and reporter Craig Silverman from ProPublica, along with Jeremy B. Merrill and Craig Timberg from The Washington Post, found that between Election Day 2020 and the Jan. 6 siege of the Capitol, Facebook groups exploded with at least 650,000 posts attacking the legitimacy of Joe Biden’s victory. The four journalists’ reporting provides some of the clearest evidence yet that Facebook was an important source of misinformation that led to the Jan. 6 attack. Here’s a look at how they did it.”

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March 15, 2022 at 10:08PM
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Tuesday CoronaBuzz, March 15, 2022: 36 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.

Tuesday CoronaBuzz, March 15, 2022: 36 pointers to updates, health information, research news, and more.
By ResearchBuzz

I started this newsletter two years ago yesterday, March 14, 2020. In that time I have indexed 13,371 articles and added no telling how many tags. The newsletter will continue as long as covid does, and if you’re spent any time looking at Asia you know this is not over. Stay safe, much love, wish I had something more to offer than this.

SOCIETAL IMPACT

CBS News: COVID pandemic death toll may be 3 times higher than official tally, new study finds. “Two years after the World Health Organization declared the coronavirus a global pandemic, new research suggests around 18.2 million people have died worldwide as a result. That toll is more than three times higher than the WHO’s tally of nearly 6 million officially reported COVID-19 deaths through the end of 2021.”

San Francisco Chronicle: S.F. homeless deaths more than doubled during the pandemic’s first year — but not because of COVID. “The grim findings echo a similar mortality spike in Los Angeles, where officials contending with rising housing costs and homelessness also used a wave of pandemic funding to test new approaches like sanctioned tent cities and state-funded hotels. Interventions like shelter-in-place hotels likely did help mitigate deaths due to COVID-19 and related health conditions, the report authors found, but lockdowns diverted resources and increased isolation that may have compounded other risks.”

Politico: Covid chaos fueled another public health crisis: STDs. “After an initial dip when the pandemic began in the spring of 2020, cases of gonorrhea and syphilis surged, reaching new highs by the end of the year, according to preliminary data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Progress on HIV, which President Donald Trump pledged to end by 2030, also slowed significantly. Public health experts expect that when the CDC releases 2021 numbers later this year, they will show that Covid-19 made a bad situation exponentially worse as clinics closed, people lost health insurance and risky behavior surged.”

The Guardian: Covid exposed the cracks in the US food system – meet the people trying to fix them. “Long before most of the emergency rooms were overloaded, it was the food system that showed the first signs of the enormous impact the pandemic would have. Empty shelves at the supermarket. Closed restaurants. Farmers dumping milk out into their fields or euthanizing animals as meat processing plants became overwhelmed or shut down. And it wasn’t just farmers or the restaurant owners or the agricultural industry that suffered: hunger spiked across the country. Food insecurity in the US increased from 11% to 15% during the pandemic, with at least 60 million Americans visiting a food bank during 2020, an increase of 50% from the year before.”

New York Times: Covid restrictions prevented dengue in hundreds of thousands of people in 2020.. “Public health measures to stop the spread of Covid-19 had an unintended consequence across Latin America and Southeast Asia in 2020: Dengue virus infections were prevented in hundreds of thousands of people, according to a study published in The Lancet this month. The research offers clues for new strategies to combat a dangerous tropical disease that had been infecting more people each year.”

HEALTH CARE / HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS

New York Times: Inside the High-Stakes Race to Test the Covid Tests. “Over the last two years, a group of researchers at Emory and other Atlanta institutions has played a key, but largely hidden, role in getting Covid tests into the hands of Americans, working with the National Institutes of Health and the Food and Drug Administration.”

HEALTH CARE – PEDIATRICS

Associated Press: For kids with COVID-19, everyday life can be a struggle. “More than 12.7 million children in the U.S. alone have tested positive for COVID-19 since the pandemic began, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics. Generally, the virus doesn’t hit kids as severely as adults. But, as with some adults, there are still bizarre outcomes.”

INSTITUTIONS

Belfast Telegraph: Northern Ireland libraries offered a virtual lifeline during pandemic: ‘We do see ourselves as community hubs’. “In our Environment in Focus Week it seemed only natural to pay homage to the institutions that provide a lifeline for many — and who continued to do so throughout the series of lockdowns and while physical doors were closed. Stephen King calls books a uniquely portable magic, and lockdown gave many a chance to catch up on their reading. It’s clear, reading the figures of the quantity of books borrowed, that Northern Ireland is a place of story lovers.”

BUSINESS / CORPORATIONS

CNN: White House will unveil new data-sharing initiative with companies to address supply chain crunch. “The Biden White House, trying to expand its limited supply of inflation-fighting tools, will on Tuesday unveil a new one. Dubbed ‘Freight Logistics Optimization Works,’ or FLOW, the effort joins administration officials and major private sector businesses in a data-sharing initiative designed to enhance the efficiency with which companies move imported goods to stores.”

Canadian Press: Quebec sugar shack owners say the COVID-19 pandemic saved the iconic industry. “The spring sugar shack experience — eating beans and ham at long tables with strangers, enjoying tractor rides through the melting snow and nibbling snow-chilled maple syrup on wooden sticks — was on the decline before the pandemic. But two years of COVID-19 lockdowns have forced the traditional industry to reinvent an outdated business model, and some say it is more sustainable than before the health crisis hit.”

Axios: Pfizer CEO: Fourth shot of COVID vaccine “necessary”. “A fourth dose of the COVID-19 vaccine will be necessary in order to maintain manageable levels of hospitalizations and mild infections, Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla told CBS’ ‘Face the Nation’ on Sunday.”

Gizmodo: Foxconn Halts Apple iPhone Production in China’s Tech Hub as Covid-19 Cases Soar. “Foxconn, a major supplier for Apple and critical partner for the manufacturing of the iPhone, has halted production in the Chinese tech hub of Shenzhen, according to a spokesperson from the tech giant. The halt in operations is a direct result of soaring covid-19 cases in China, a country that has managed to keep cases relatively low for the past two years.”

Axios: Streaming boom propels film industry’s pandemic recovery. “A sharp uptick in paid online video subscriptions and original content production for streaming platforms has helped the movie industry recover from the coronavirus pandemic, according to a new report. Why it matters: The global streaming and theatrical movie market raked in a nearly a combined total of $99.7 million in 2021, eclipsing pre-pandemic sales.”

WORLD GOVERNMENT / NON-US GOVERNMENT

The Guardian: Dismay as funding for UK’s ‘world-beating’ Covid trackers is axed. “If anything about the UK’s response to Covid-19 was world-beating, it was our surveillance system. From the World Health Organization to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), public health teams around the world have praised the UK’s infection-tracking capability, and used our data to plan their own pandemic measures. Despite this health ministers have cancelled future funding for the React-1 study and other research projects.”

Reuters: COVID surges in Hong Kong, leader urges vaccines. ” Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam said on Friday that the city’s COVID-19 vaccination program would focus on its elderly and children, as authorities battled to reduce a massive surge in infections and climbing death rates. Health authorities reported over 29,000 new infections and 196 deaths on Friday.”

Hong Kong Free Press: Covid-19: 17 million locked down in Shenzhen as virus cases double nationwide. “China placed all 17 million residents in one of its biggest cities under lockdown on Sunday, as virus cases doubled nationwide to nearly 3,400 and anxiety mounted over the resilience of its ‘zero-Covid’ approach in the face of the worst outbreak in two years.”

Yonhap News Agency: (3rd LD) S. Korea’s new COVID-19 cases above 300,000 for 3rd day as omicron rages. “The country added 309,790 new COVID-19 infections, the majority of which coming from local transmissions, putting the total caseload at 6,866,222, the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) said.”

Deutsche Welle: COVID digest: Germany’s situation ‘critical,’ Lauterbach says. “Despite planning to further relax COVID-19 rules, Germany logged a record high number of coronavirus infections in 24 hours on Thursday, and a figure almost as high, 252,836 cases, on Friday.”

BBC: China: Businesses shut as officials widen Covid lockdowns. “Multinational companies have halted some operations as China widens its Covid lockdowns – among its biggest since the start of the pandemic. Tens of millions of people across the country face restrictions, including the entire Jilin province and technology hub Shenzhen, as authorities report record numbers of cases.”

NBC News: Covid cases climb in Europe as restrictions ease and BA.2 subvariant spreads. “Among the countries with the biggest recent surges are Finland, where new cases jumped by 84 percent in its weekly case total, to nearly 62,500 weekly cases; Switzerland, whose weekly total rose by 45 percent, to 182,190; and the United Kingdom, which had a 31 percent increase, to a weekly total of 414,480 new cases. Austria, Belgium, France, Germany and Italy have also recorded double-digit percentage increases in their weekly tallies.”

Haaretz: BA.2 Variant Drives Up Israel’s COVID Infection Rate Ahead of Purim Holiday. “Health Ministry officials are worried about the continued rise in the rate of COVID infections and its possible effects on the number of patients in serious condition, as the infectious BA.2 variant continues to spread ahead of the Purim holidays.”

UNITED STATES / UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT

ABC News: Rise in COVID-19 infections overseas may foreshadow increase in US, experts say. “When the coronavirus receded across much of the globe last month and the omicron surge declined, many Americans were hopeful that was perhaps the signal that the United States was entering a new phase of the pandemic. However, new data indicators, domestically and internationally, suggest that the virus continues to spread.”

East Bay Times: How low will it go? California COVID cases, hospitalizations back to pre-delta lows. “As we enter year three of the pandemic, COVID case rates, the number of patients hospitalized with the virus, and the test positivity rate have all dropped below the level we saw during the most recent low point — during the post-delta, pre-omicron lull. California has not seen COVID numbers this low since the summer of 2021, at the height of the country’s vaccination campaign, before the delta wave set the stage for omicron’s massive spike.”

Politico: Email: Government scientists prep to slash Covid research in funding gap. “Scientists at the National Institutes of Health are scrambling to decide whether all its coronavirus research and development can continue after Congress dropped new funding from its sweeping budget bill. There are immediate implications for government trials on Covid-19 therapies, tests and vaccines that run out of funds as soon as this month, according to an internal email obtained by POLITICO.”

CNET: FDA Warns Against Some COVID Tests From Popular Brand Flowflex. “If you have an at-home COVID-19 Flowflex test that came in a dark blue box, don’t use it, the US Food and Drug Administration said this month. At least, if you got it in the US.”

STATES / STATE GOVERNMENT

Politico: CDC wants to monitor poop: States aren’t all on board. “Probing poop can help public health officials more quickly identify and respond to clusters of Covid cases or other viruses. But lackluster participation leaves gaping holes in what public officials intend to be a comprehensive early warning system for infectious diseases, rendering the country vulnerable to the next Covid-19 variant or public health crisis, according to POLITICO interviews with state health officials and wastewater experts across 17 states.”

Washington Post: Opinion: How does Ron DeSantis sleep at night?. “Florida residents were, since vaccines have been widely available, nearly seven times as likely to die from covid-19 as residents of D.C., nearly three times as likely to die as residents of California and 2½ times as likely to die as residents of New York. With Florida’s population of about 22 million, that’s a lot of unnecessary deaths.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS

ABC News: Inside woman’s long COVID battle as US marks 2nd anniversary of coronavirus pandemic. “Nicole Wahler was in her mid-20s and in the best shape of her life when she tested positive for COVID-19 in June 2020. Now, nearly two years later, Wahler, 28, said she is still suffering from the effects of the virus, which to date has killed nearly 6 million people around the world.”

Washington Post: For these young people, the pandemic has been harsh. Here are their hopes for the future.. “In 2021, as the pandemic showed no signs of abating, young people across the country were dealing with isolation and altered dreams, and were trying figure out what their futures would be like. We were among them — two college students who wanted to see how our generation was coping. For six months, we crisscrossed 23 states and interviewed more than 80 young people suspended in that transitional time between adolescence and adulthood.”

INDIVIDUALS / BANDS / GROUPS – CELEBRITIES/FAMOUS

ABC News: Barack Obama tests positive for COVID-19, former president confirms on Twitter. “Former President Barack Obama has tested positive for COVID-19, he tweeted on Sunday. Obama said he is ‘feeling fine’ other than a scratchy throat, reminding people to get vaccinated even as the number of cases in the U.S. goes down.”

HIGHER EDUCATION

Arizona State University: The importance of parents when starting college during a pandemic. “A new study has shown that parent-child relationships protected students who started college in the midst of the pandemic from alcohol misuse and mental health problems. The study followed 425 first-year students who started college in the fall 2020 semester, a time when many classes were still offered remotely and social distancing impacted extracurricular activities. Nearly half of the participants reported mental health struggles, alcohol use or a combination of both.”

HEALTH

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: A ‘tornado’ in the body: Battling long COVID, months after infection. “While the pandemic may finally be easing in Western Pennsylvania, COVID-19 is not over for patients like Mr. [Joseph] Wheeler, who have what is known as long COVID. Most people who get COVID-19 recover within a few weeks, but others can develop new or lingering health problems that last for months after first catching the virus. For many of these long COVID patients, symptoms are debilitating or disruptive to daily life. Some can’t return to work or enjoy many of the activities they once did.”

TECHNOLOGY / INTERNET

Mozilla Blog: The pandemic changed everything — even the way we use browser extensions. “On March 11, 2020 the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a global pandemic. Within days, practically the entire planet was on lockdown. We went indoors and online. So how did the sudden mass migration online impact browser extension usage? Pretty dramatically, it turns out. On this two-year mark of the start of the pandemic we looked back at Firefox extension installs and usage data to discover several compelling trends.”

RESEARCH

PsyPost: Focus on money lessened throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. “A series of three studies examined the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on materialism, finding an overall decrease in the importance people place on money. This research was published in the journal Psychology & Marketing.”

PsyPost: Unvaccinated Trump supporters are mostly unmoved by expert messaging, study finds. “Trump voters are more likely to be swayed by a political figure endorsing the COVID-19 vaccine rather than factual, scientific testimony by doctors, a new study published in PLOS One suggests.”

OPINION

HuffPost: I Gained 70 Pounds During COVID. Here’s What Happened On My First Day Back In The Office.. “When we are finally able to climb out of survival mode after this traumatic, globe-changing event, I’m hoping most people will be far more concerned about how to acclimate back into their long-abandoned routines, how to fortify their depleted mental health, how to honor those we have lost by relearning the little things we didn’t know were what added up to make us human. I hope it’s soul stuff we’ll be focused on, not bodies. I do want to get back to a more active lifestyle, because, well, movement feels good. But whether I eventually lose the weight I gained or not (and if I do, I will miss you, massive boobs!), I have to do my best to accept my body where it is every step of the way.”

CoronaBuzz is brought to you by ResearchBuzz. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you.



March 15, 2022 at 08:24PM
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OpenAI-Powered Writing, Oncology State Legislation, Google Sheets, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, March 15, 2022

OpenAI-Powered Writing, Oncology State Legislation, Google Sheets, More: Tuesday ResearchBuzz, March 15, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

VentureBeat: You.com launches an AI-powered writing tool powered by OpenAI. “Just a few months ago, Bryan McCann and Richard Socher, the former chief scientist at Salesforce, launched You.com, a search engine that leverages AI to understand search queries, rank the results, and parse the queries into different languages (including programming languages)…. In its quest to recalibrate expectations around search engines, You.com is today launching a search app built in collaboration with OpenAI that generates snippets — or even documents — of text when given a prompt.” I played with it briefly. It’s interesting, but note that You.com says it is “free for a limited time”.

PRNewswire: First-Of-Its-Kind Oncology State Legislation Tracking Tool (PRESS RELEASE). “Today, NCODA announces the launch of its new and unique, comprehensive Oncology State Legislation Tracking Tool. This new NCODA member resource is the first-of-its-kind within the oncology space that allows healthcare professionals and other users to stay up-to-date on the latest in state legislation pertaining to issues such as PBMs and copay accumulators. Unlike other state legislation trackers, this tool encompasses all updates throughout the United States in one location, and is updated on a weekly basis.” Apparently qualified persons can get complimentary membership to NCODA, while journalists and other interested persons can request access.

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Android Police: Google Sheets cell limit doubles in new update, inching closer to Microsoft Excel. “How many cells would you say Google Sheets has? Take a wild guess — one million, maybe two? That used to be the case until Google increased the total number of cells in the spreadsheet from two million to five million in 2019. In an insane move, the company is now taking sheets from five million cells to 10 million to give users more space to work with.”

TechCrunch: Google Cloud gets more expensive. “Renting cloud infrastructure typically gets cheaper over time, but Google Cloud is bucking this trend today with significant price increases across a number of core services. These increases, which Google announced under the guise of wanting to provide ‘more flexible pricing models and options,’ will go into effect on October 1, 2022. Most developers are not amused.”

Search Engine Journal: WordPress Releases a New Performance Plugin. “WordPress announced the release of a plugin called the Performance Lab plugin. It was developed by the WordPress performance team that is designed to help WordPress sites speed up. The plugin gives publishers the opportunity to use new improvements now before they are included into the core of WordPress itself.”

USEFUL STUFF

Mashable: How to organize your favorite TikToks into collections. “TikTok offers an endless stream of fun and informative videos that can have you scrolling for hours on end — as well as losing irresponsible amounts of sleep. With so much interesting content, it’s easy to lose clips you might want to revisit later even after you’ve favorited them. Fortunately, TikTok allows you to sort your favorite videos into collections, adding some order to your obsessions so you aren’t scrolling through hundreds of K-pop fancams to find that one fried chicken recipe.”

The Guardian: Stop doomscrolling! The 50 cheeriest social media accounts – from dancing academics to seal pups. “Now more than ever we all need to sprinkle some happiness into our social media feeds. Here are the best accounts to follow, whether you love spectacular jelly creations or hilarious Japanese mascots.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

CNBC: Google employees are becoming unhappy with pay, promotions and execution, survey results show. “Google’s annual employee surveys, internally called ‘Googlegeist,’ show that a growing number of staffers don’t view their pay packages as fair or competitive with what they could make in a similar role elsewhere. They are also questioning their employer’s ability to execute.”

University of Tennessee Knoxville: UT Libraries Acquires Beauford Delaney Collection. “The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Libraries has acquired the complete personal archive of internationally renowned modernist painter Beauford Delaney (1901–1979). Delaney, a member of the Harlem Renaissance and one of the leading modernist painters of his time, helped revolutionize art of the 20th century through abstract and expressionist painting—all despite battling poverty, prejudice, and mental illness.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Washington Post: Why Wall Street Is in Hot Water for Using WhatsApp. “Bankers and brokers often say that they’re much more closely regulated than executives in other industries. At least in terms of their business communications, they have a point. An ongoing investigation focuses on finance professionals shirking government rules by using texts and personal emails to conduct business.”

New York Times: How California Is Building the Nation’s First Privacy Police. “Mr. [Ashkan] Soltani faces the daunting task of overseeing the first government body in the United States with the sole job of regulating how Google, Facebook, Amazon and other companies collect and use data from millions of people. The office, the California Privacy Protection Agency, will be a more than 30-person group with a $10 million annual budget to help enforce the state’s privacy law, which is among the most stringent in the country.”

The Register: NASA in ‘serious jeopardy’ due to big black hole in security . “An audit of NASA’s infosec preparedness against insider threats has warned it faces ‘serious jeopardy to operations’ due to lack of protection for Unclassified information.” Good morning, Internet…

Do you like ResearchBuzz? Does it help you out? Please consider supporting it on Patreon. Not interested in commitment? Perhaps you’d buy me an iced tea. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you. Feel free to comment on the blog, or @ResearchBuzz on Twitter. Thanks!



March 15, 2022 at 08:05PM
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Monday, March 14, 2022

Holocaust Survivor Interviews, Polynesia Geochemistry, Chicago Black History, More: Monday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 14, 2022

Holocaust Survivor Interviews, Polynesia Geochemistry, Chicago Black History, More: Monday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, March 14, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

PRNewswire: The Blue Card Launches Podcast to Provide Holocaust Survivors a Voice, Now Available on Spotify and Anchor (PRESS RELEASE). “The Blue Card, a national non-profit organization assisting Holocaust survivors in need, recently launched their podcast on Monday, February 14, with their first guest being Holocaust survivor Laszlo Adler. In this series entitled Stories of The Holocaust, Masha Pearl, Executive Director of The Blue Card interviews survivors about their Holocaust experience, how they navigate their trauma, and the life lessons which have helped shape their perspective on prejudice and justice.”

Eos: Geochemical Data from Polynesian Artifacts Pack Pofatu Database. “An embracing Sky father and Earth mother had many children, one of whom pushed apart their parents to let in the light, according to Māori origin traditions. In one version told to Māori archaeologist Gerard O’Regan of the Ngāi Tahu tribe, an unborn child remains in the womb, his eyes, or whatu, peering out as rocks, or kōwhatu, a Māori word for stone…. Elsewhere in Polynesia, a reconstruction of the word is *pofatu, said Aymeric Hermann, an archaeologist at the French National Centre for Scientific Research. He is also cocreator of the Pofatu database, a compilation of geochemical information gleaned from stone tools and source quarries scattered throughout the Pacific that can be matched with one another.”

University of Chicago Library: Find archives of Black life in Chicago through new online resource at UChicago Library. “A new online gateway to collection guides hosted by the University of Chicago Library will make it easier to discover and use archival collections highlighting Black experiences at institutions across the Chicago area—including papers, photos, correspondence and more documenting the lives of people from Mahalia Jackson to Harold Washington, and organizations from the Chicago Urban League to the African Methodist Episcopal Church.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Techdirt: Announcing The Winners Of The 4th Annual Public Domain Game Jam!. “Well, it took us a little longer than usual, but we’re finally ready to announce the winners of our fourth annual public domain game jam, Gaming Like It’s 1926! We asked designers to create games based on works published in 1926 (plus some earlier sound recordings, due to the complexities of copyright law) that entered the public domain in the US this year. There seemed to be a lot of excitement around the public domain in 2022, and that resulted in us getting more submissions than in any jam since the first.”

Search Engine Journal: Twitter Tests More Visible Alt Text. “A visible ‘ALT’ badge, and exposed image descriptions, are among the features Twitter is testing to improve image accessibility on mobile and desktop. In an announcement, Twitter states it’s testing the features with 3% of users across iOS, Android, and web browsers.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Fredonia State University of New York: SUNY Fredonia archives preserves Holocaust survivors’ memories. “How Holocaust survivors who relocated to western New York recalled their German camp experiences in interviews they gave more than three decades ago have been preserved in a digitalization project undertaken by Special Collections and Archives at SUNY Fredonia.” The interviews are not yet available online; that happens later this spring.

SECURITY & LEGAL

Bleeping Computer: Malware Disguised As Valorant Cheats Are Hiding In YouTube Descriptions. “Korean security analysts have spotted a malware distribution campaign that uses Valorant cheat lures on YouTube to trick players into downloading RedLine, a powerful information stealer. This type of abuse is quite common, as the threat actors find it easy to bypass YouTube’s new content submission reviews or create new accounts when reported and blocked.”

Mashable: Cyberflashing to become illegal in England and Wales . “Recent research by Professor Jessica Ringrose, head of sociology at UCL’s Institute of Education, found that 76 percent of girls aged between 12 and 18 had been sent unsolicited nude images of boys or men. Per YouGov data, 41 percent of women aged between 18 and 36 ‘have been sent an unsolicited photo of a man’s private parts.’ Researchers have found that women are often overwhelmingly the target of this violation.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

StateTech Magazine: Philadelphia Launches Smart Streetlight Pilot Program to Collect Data in Real Time. “As cities around the country seek to leverage smart technology, Philadelphia is continuing its efforts to collect data to address inequality. The city’s recently announced smart streetlight pilot is another tool employed to level the playing field for all of the city’s residents. By design, the SmartBlockPHL program uses sensors on smart streetlights to count people and objects, check air quality and monitor weather conditions. In addition, the streetlights will collect information about local pedestrian traffic, street activity and the environment.”

Tech Xplore: New music recommendation system includes long-tail songs. “Music recommendation systems commonly offer users songs that others have enjoyed in the genres that the user requests. This can lead to popular songs becoming more popular. However, it neglects the less well-known songs, the long-tail songs that users may well enjoy just as much but have less chance of hearing because of the way the recommendation algorithms work. New work in the International Journal of Computational Systems Engineering, offers an approach to a music recommendation system that neglects the popular in favor of the long-tail and so could open users to new music.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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March 15, 2022 at 02:16AM
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War in Ukraine Dashboard, Ukraine Refugee Data Portal, New York Times on Telegram, More: Ukraine Update, Afternoon, March 14, 2022

War in Ukraine Dashboard, Ukraine Refugee Data Portal, New York Times on Telegram, More: Ukraine Update, Afternoon, March 14, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Spotted on Twitter: the Alliance for Securing Democracy’s War in Ukraine dashboard. From the front page: “This dashboard provides a summary analysis of Russian government and state-backed media tweets, videos, and articles that mention one or more predefined keywords related to the current war on Ukraine. Content is sub-categorized by the board narratives used by the Kremlin to justify its ongoing invasion, such as blame cast on NATO engagement or extremism in Ukraine, or messaging used to push back against Western intervention, such as nuclear threats or counter-sanctions narratives.”

UNHCR: Launch of UNHCR data portal on Ukraine Refugee Situation. “UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, has activated today a Ukraine Refugee Situation operational data portal. The portal contains the latest statistics on refugee arrivals from Ukraine to major receiving countries.”

New York Times: The New York Times launches a Telegram channel to deliver news about the war.. “To make our journalism more accessible to readers around the world, The New York Times has launched a new, dedicated channel on Telegram, a messaging platform with more than half a billion active users. This Telegram channel delivers reporting on the war from our continuous live blog, where Times journalists are providing witness accounts, interviews and breaking news from the conflict.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Reuters: Meta Narrows Guidance to Prohibit Calls for Death of a Head of State. “Facebook owner Meta Platforms said on Sunday that it is further narrowing its content moderation policy for Ukraine to prohibit calls for the death of a head of state, according to an internal company post seen by Reuters.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

Techdirt: Video Games For Good: Itch.io Releases “Bundle For Ukraine,” Raises Millions Of Dollars. “For all the posts we’ve done on the impact of video games on society, I have found myself typically either beating back the notion that gaming is a terrible thing responsible for all the world’s problems or talking about common IP conflicts. On the topic of the internet generally, well, it’s mostly the same. But we also have opportunities to talk about the good that gaming and the internet can do. Which brings us to Itch.io and its brand new ‘Bundle For Ukraine.'”

CNET: How Ukrainian Civilians Are Using Phones to Share the Invasion With the World. “Since Russia invaded Ukraine, the world has gotten a direct view of the war as ordinary Ukrainians document the fighting tearing through their country. They’re not relying on sophisticated gear as they share videos and photos of the destruction and violence. Rather, they’re using the tools they’ve long relied on to communicate: smartphones, social media, messaging apps and a widespread telecommunications network that’s so far been spared from devastation.”

CNN: Fact check: How a false story about Leonardo DiCaprio donating $10 million to Ukraine spread around the world. “The International Visegrad Fund told CNN on Wednesday that, contrary to the news reports, it did not announce a $10 million DiCaprio donation to Ukraine and has no related information. So how did this false story spread so far? The saga of the nonexistent $10 million donation is a case study in how bad information can bubble up from the online fringes to mainstream media outlets — with outlet after outlet, big and small alike, simply repeating the story without independently verifying it.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

The Verge: A top Wikipedia editor has been arrested in Belarus. “The Main Directorate for Combating Organized Crime and Corruption of Belarus (GUBOPiK) has detained prominent Wikipedia editor Mark Bernstein, according to the Belarusian publication Zerkalo. The arrest comes after Bernstein’s personal information was shared on GOBUPiK’s public Telegram channel. Bernstein is one of the top 50 editors of Russian Wikipedia.”

CNBC: ‘For the first time in history anyone can join a war’: Volunteers join Russia-Ukraine cyber fight. “Cyber warfare related to the Ukraine-Russia conflict is surging as digital volunteers from around the world enter the fight. The number of cyberattacks being waged by — and on behalf of — both countries since the outbreak of the war is ‘staggering,’ according to the research arm of Check Point Software Technologies.”

Washington Post: Fleeing Putin’s wartime crackdown, Russian journalists build media hubs in exile. “The media clampdown in Russia that followed the invasion of Ukraine has decimated a journalism community already ground to near extinction by years of oppression. The New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists said at least 150 of Russia’s few remaining independent reporters and editors have left since tanks rolled into Ukraine, plunging Russia into what the group called an ‘information dark age.’ Now — in Lithuania, Latvia, Georgia and other former Soviet states where Russian remains a common language — they are scrambling to set up newsrooms in exile, determined to continue the hazardous mission of speaking truth to authoritarianism.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Daily Beast: The Problem With Banning Russian Disinformation. “In a thoughtful new book, Cheap Speech: How Disinformation Poisons Our Politics—and How to Cure It, eminent University of California-Irvine law professor Richard L. Hasen proposes to counter the threat posed by ‘fake news’ and ‘cheap speech’ by tweaking First Amendment protections and permitting narrow, targeted restrictions of speech. Yet there remains a compelling case for why the U.S. approach to regulating speech is preferable to even a modest and well-intentioned pivot (such as the European model) when it comes to concerted disinformation and anti-democratic propaganda.”

Washington Post: Opinions | Putin’s assault also targets Ukraine’s history. “On Feb. 27 in Chernihiv oblast, Russian shelling severely damaged the regional headquarters of the Security Service of Ukraine, or Sluzhba Bezpeky Ukrainy (SBU), which houses important archival materials including documentation of Nazi atrocities in Ukraine. If Putin succeeds in destroying or removing critical records like those in the SBU archive, it could erase Ukrainians’ distinct experiences and buttress Putin’s view of history, in which, among many other things, he sees Ukrainians and Russians as one people.”

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March 15, 2022 at 12:26AM
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Flemish Films, Extracting Questions, 2020 Census, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, March 14, 2022

Flemish Films, Extracting Questions, 2020 Census, More: Monday ResearchBuzz, March 14, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Flanders Audiovisual Fund (VAF), and translated from Dutch by Google Translate: Online search platform for Flemish films flaminGO.pics launched. “With flaminGO.pics, the Flemish Audiovisual Fund (VAF) is today launching an online search platform that helps users worldwide to find out how to watch Flemish films legally on streaming platforms, in a cinema near them or at a film festival.”

UX Collective: The power of seeing only the questions in a piece of writing. “I’ve been watching how writers use questions lately, and thought: Hmmm, it’d be cool to see only the questions in a piece of prose. I probably started down this line of thinking because last fall I created a little web tool that removes everything but the punctuation from a piece of writing. That tool wound up being a pretty intriguing type of literary x-ray: I discovered, for example, that I use a ton of parentheticals (and way too many m-dashes). Since I already had the code for that, it wasn’t too hard for me to program a version focuses on questions instead.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

New York Times: 2020 Census Undercounted Hispanic, Black and Native American Residents. “Saddled with daunting logistical and political obstacles, the 2020 census seriously undercounted the number of Hispanic, Black and Native American residents even though its overall population count was largely accurate, the Census Bureau said on Thursday. At the same time, the census overcounted white and Asian American residents, the bureau said.”

The Register: Afraid of the big bad Linux desktop? Zorin 16.1 is here. “Zorin 16.1 has arrived, marking the first major update of the Linux distribution since August’s release. Unashamedly user-friendly, with an interface unlikely to scare off Windows or Mac users, the most eye-catching element of the update is LibreOffice 7.3, replete with better Microsoft Office compatibility, improved performance, and tweaks for dark mode fans.”

USEFUL STUFF

PCWorld: The best free backup software and services: Where is it safe to skimp?. “Finding a good free backup solution is easier than you’d think. A host of companies offer free online backup or free backup software—and perhaps surprisingly, nearly all of them are quite competent.”

AROUND THE SEARCH AND SOCIAL MEDIA WORLD

National Security Archive: U.S. National Archives’ (NARA) Budget: The 30-Year Flatline. “While its budget has flatlined, the number of records NARA must preserve, particularly electronic records, has increased exponentially over three decades. The George H.W. Bush Library, for example, has 20 gigabytes of electronic records in its holdings, whereas the Obama Library has 250 terabytes.[2] This explosion of electronic records is a huge part of the growing backlog for Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and Mandatory Declassification Review (MDR) requests at the presidential libraries, which constitute only part of NARA’s holdings.”

The Guardian: Google profiting from ‘predatory’ loan adverts promising instant cash. “Google is profiting from ads promoting ‘instant’ cash and loans delivered ‘faster than pizza’ despite a pledge to ​protect users from ‘deceptive and harmful’ financial products. The ads were served to people in the UK who searched terms like ‘quick money now’ and ‘need money help’​ and directed users to ​firms offering high-interest loans.”

Route Fifty: Rural County Puts Land Records on Blockchain. “A southwest Virginia county with about 40,000 residents situated near the Kentucky border is using blockchain for managing land records – the latest effort in 25 years of technological innovation.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

BBC: Will the US crack down on cryptocurrency?. “The US is moving to craft new rules to govern cryptocurrencies amid rising concerns that the fast-growing industry is a haven for criminals and poses risks to financial stability.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

United Nations News: Social media poses ‘existential threat’ to traditional, trustworthy news: UNESCO . “The business model of the news media is ‘broken’ and with it, our fundamental right to information is at risk, a new UNESCO report examining global trends in freedom of expression warns.”

NoCamels: Israeli Company That Developed AI Lifeguard Now Predicts Dangerous Flooding. “It’s hard to imagine with all the rain and sleet and snow this month in various parts of the world that spring and summer are just around the corner. Sightbit, the Israeli startup leveraging AI to alert lifeguards when swimmers are in danger, is ready, with its life-saving, preventative drowning tech already implemented and operating at full capacity at beaches throughout Israel, Europe, and the US. Along the way, the Beersheba-based company has received requests from some of the same customers that use its AI tech to come up with a way to deal with aquatic environments and situations, including floods.”

Chronicle (Luxembourg): Luxembourg, Wallonia Launch Web App for Forest Adaptation to Climate Change. “The Nature and Forest Agency of Luxembourg’s Ministry of the Environment, Climate and Sustainable Development has announced the launch of a new web application dedicated to forestry adaptation to climate change… Developed in partnership with the Walloon Region in Belgium, this is a decision-making tool for forest managers and owners in the context of forest adaptation to climate change.” Good morning, Internet…

Do you like ResearchBuzz? Does it help you out? Please consider supporting it on Patreon. Not interested in commitment? Perhaps you’d buy me an iced tea. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you. Feel free to comment on the blog, or @ResearchBuzz on Twitter. Thanks!



March 14, 2022 at 07:55PM
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